Intrepid_Chef
Silver Member
- 5,161
A dear friend of mine recently bought a stone from me. (She gladly paid direct shipping rather than order it from someone in her hometown so I want to do right by her!)
This is what she posted in a message board we belong to:
People are asking if her oven is heating unevenly ... she doesn't think so but does think maybe she had too many rolls on the stone.
Also ...these were her results when baking pizza:
Can anybody help her? I'm sending her a link to this thread so she can keep up with your sage advice!
This is what she posted in a message board we belong to:
I got the large baking stone last week and used it for the first time yesterday to bake rolls.
Here's my question: the center rolls seemed underdone while the inner ones were borderline done/overdone. Is there a way to even out the baking? I'm worried that my pizza (from scratch, raw dough) will cook unevenly, too.
I had let the rolls rise on the stone then baked them at 425 like the recipe stated.
People are asking if her oven is heating unevenly ... she doesn't think so but does think maybe she had too many rolls on the stone.
Also ...these were her results when baking pizza:
What was weird is that it still baked unevenly. To try to get the pizza to rise more, I made it then put it in the cold oven and brought it up to temperature instead of putting it in the hot oven.
Anyway, the dough on the stone in the BACK of the oven was not as well done as the part on the stone in the FRONT. That's really weird, since on my metal pan, it's the opposite. I tend to rotate the metal pan halfway through cooking so it bakes evenly; I didn't bother with the stone, but I should have.
I was wondering if it was because more of the heating element is at the front of the oven. But I thought this stone was supposed to heat evenly!
One plus: the crust came out crunchier than normal, and hubby liked that.
Can anybody help her? I'm sending her a link to this thread so she can keep up with your sage advice!